MIDHURST
The parish, containing 669 acres, lies in a bend of the
River Rother, which forms its north and east boundaries, a tributary stream dividing it on the south-east
from West Lavington. The western half is mostly
common and woodland, the eastern is occupied by the
town, which developed at the foot of the castle-crowned
hill. This hill stands in the angle of the Rother and the
stream. It was known colloquially in the 18th century
as Tan Hill, which was 'corrected' into St. Anne's
Hill; (fn. 1) the name, however, was almost certainly a corruption of St. Denis, whose chapel stood on the summit.
Historically nothing is known of the castle, or fortified
manor-house, but excavations (fn. 2) have shown that it consisted of a curtain wall, 5 ft. thick, inclosing some 5½
acres, entered at the south-west by an archway, without
any gatehouse. An irregular oval inclosure in the southeast angle probably marks the keep. North of this stood
the chapel, consisting of a chancel 15 ft. square, and a
nave 20 by 18 ft. with a western door. Beyond this,
against the curtain wall, which here runs straight north
and south, was a rectangular block divided into two parts,
respectively 31 by 18 ft. and 22½ by 18 ft., probably
cellarage under the hall and chamber. Fragmentary
foundations north of this may mark the site of the
kitchen and offices. The ground slopes steeply on the
north to the Town Meadow, on the east to the Rother,
and on the south to the mill-race of South Pond; on the
west it was divided from the town by a dry ditch.
Evidence points to the Bohuns having abandoned this
site in favour of Cowdray about 1280; and during the
time, 1284–1311, that Midhurst was in the hands of
Anthony Beck, Bishop of Durham, his agents are said
to have pulled down, in one place, a hall worth £50,
a chamber (£62), another chamber (£12), two chapels
(£5 each), a kitchen (10 marks), and a granary (5
marks). (fn. 3) This points to the dismantling of the site, but
'the chapel of St. Denis within the former castle of Midhurst' (fn. 4) was functioning in 1291, and is referred to in
1367 as standing 'in a place called Courtgrene'. (fn. 5)
As in most other live towns, the oldest buildings survive chiefly off the main thoroughfare. In North Street,
which is the High Street of the town, nearly all the
buildings have been rebuilt or altered from the 18th
century onwards. A peculiarity is that the main road
(A 286) from London to Chichester enters the town as
a side-turning at the bridge over the River Rother and
after passing through North Street is suddenly diverted
by a sharp bend eastwards through the narrow Knock
Hundred Row to pass southwards through Lion Street
and the market square, the roadway on either side of
the isolated old market hall and buildings north of it
being narrow and dangerous. The apparent continuation southwards of the main road through North Street,
Rumbold's Hill, (fn. 6) and the Mint merely comes to a dead
end at Bepton; and the continuation of North Street
northwards (A 272) passes through Easebourne village
to turn eastwards through Cowdray Park for Petworth.
West Street starts from the market square, crosses the
north-south roadway at the junction of Rumbold's Hill
and the Mint to continue westwards as the main road
(A 272) to Petersfield.
Lion Street has ancient buildings on its west side but,
except for the bottleneck north end of it, was widened
in the 18th century, either by the frontage being set
back to that of the parish church or by the demolition
of most of a 17th-century island. Two buildings of this
island still survive by the market square at the south end
of Lion Street and facing West Street. The old market
hall stands south of these. There are some old buildings
in West Street, and in Wool Lane which runs northward from West Street to a fork with Rumbold's Hill.
All the ancient buildings were of timber-framing, of
which the old market hall, the Spread Eagle Hotel
(west of it), and several others are good, if not very
ornate, examples.
The old market hall stands isolated, south of West
Street and west of the market square. It is now used as
an estate agent's offices and the upper story is a private
residence; this upper story was the first home of the
grammar school founded by Gilbert Hannam in 1672. (fn. 7)
It dates presumably from 1552, when Sir Anthony
Browne granted to the burgesses a vacant space, 70 by
30 ft., in the market on which to build a market house, (fn. 8)
but it has been much renovated and altered; the lower
story, which presumably was open-sided originally, is
closed with modern timber-framing, windows, &c. The
upper story is jettied on the north front and east and
west ends on moulded bressummers supported by
shaped brackets. The front is of two bays with square
framing. In each bay is a three-sided bay-window on
shaped brackets and with pedimental heads. The two
main gable-heads also project on stop-moulded bressummers and brackets and are of square framing. The
east and west ends are similarly treated except for the
windows, which were flat and are now blocked. The
south elevation is in one plane and the west half is of
timber-framing with a tile-hung gable-head; the east
half is of brick and has a chimney-stack. That the
building extended one bay farther southwards originally
is borne out by the positions of the two long diagonal
ceiling beams in the lower story.
The Spread Eagle Hotel includes an L-shaped
building of timber-framing at the corner of West
Street and South Street, dating probably from the 15th
century, and a mid-late 17th-century building south of
it, facing eastwards towards South Street. The timber
building was apparently the inn originally but was
abandoned when the 17th-century part was built and
became shops. The east front of it has a jettied upper
story on shaped brackets and the north half has a projecting gable-head. The framing is mostly plain rectangular panels, with fairly close-set studding in the
south half. The windows have been renovated and
fitted with lattice glazing. The north side has heavy
curved braces below the wall-plate. The west half is
still a separate shop and a tiled pentise or hood to the
whole length is a reminder that the east half has also
been a shop. It has two projecting windows on coving
or brackets and a doorway between them. It is now
part of the two lounges that occupy all the east range.
These have open-timbered ceilings with heavy chamfered beams and wide flat joists. The northern chamber
has a 7½ft. west fire-place of stone in which is an iron
fireback with the Stuart royal arms. The south end
of the range has some abnormally heavy timbers with
straight braces. In the upper story are queen-post roof
trusses and straight wind-braces to the purlins. In
some of the upper windows is a good deal of collected
17th-century Flemish heraldic and other glass (1612
to c. 1640).
The southern part of the hotel is of red brick with
stone angle-dressings and plain architraves to the windows. It is of two stories, attics, and cellars. The
southernmost room is lined with late-17th-century oak
panelling, also the room above, and there is some reset
early-17th-century panelling. Behind is an 18th-century wing of whitened brickwork. Part of it—the
dining-room—has a wide fire-place and old ceiling
beams.
The Swan Inn and an adjoining building are the
remains of a 17th-century island north of the market
hall and west of the market square. The inn has plastered walls and the upper story of most of the east front
is jettied, but the south block is modern.
The shop and house next north appears to date from
earlier in the 17th-century than the inn. The walls are
plastered: the east and west ends have jettied upper
stories and projecting gable-heads. There was another
building north of it and its present north wall was the
party wall. It is of ancient timber-framing with curved
struts, and two fire-places are exposed; the upper has
moulded brick jambs and a four-centred head.
The building west of this block at the corner of Lion
Street is modern but the next north of it in the narrow
part of the street next the island may be of 15th or
early-16th-century date, judging from the moulded
bressummer to the jettied upper story: it is a small
building with a frontage of about 16 ft. and has timberframing to both stories.
The next north (two shops) is a plastered building
with a jettied upper story on curved brackets of the
17th century; it has modern windows. A longer building adjoining, now a house and two shops, was probably one tenement of early-17th-century date and was
evidently an inn ('The Lion' ?). The southernmost part
projects a little; it has a jettied upper story and a gablehead, the barge-boards of which are carved with a
pierced foliage pattern. It is all plastered, as is also the
northern extension, which is also jettied above the two
modern shop-fronts. In front of the gable is the iron
bracket for the former inn-sign.
The next to the north is similar but has moulded
brackets below the overhang. Farther north is 'the
Old Manor House', a rough-casted timber-framed
house said to date from 1634. The north part of
the east front is gabled and has moulded barge-boards
decorated with foil-headed panels. The lower story has
an 18th-century bow-window. The ceilings are open-timbered.
On the west side of the narrow north end is a row of
three late-17th-century cottages in a curve with stone
rubble lower walls and the upper story of square
timber-framing.
On the opposite side is a somewhat similar long building with tile-hanging to the upper story. Part of it was
once a shop and has a tiled pentise; timber-framing
shows in the north end.
On the south side of West Street are two adjoining
houses, the western dated 1660 and the other of the
early 17th century. Later alterations have merged the
two into one, but divided into three or four tenements
and shops. The upper story of the east house is of
fairly close studding and has a small gable in front:
probably it was jettied and is now underbuilt. The
shops have old ceiling beams, one moulded. The western
house is of square framing and is jettied, partly underbuilt by the shop front which overlaps from the eastern
house. It has a small gable and in front of it is a projecting square bay to the upper story: this has a pediment in which are the initials S/IM' and below the
window the face is panelled with moulded ribs and has
the date 1660. Probably it had a lower story, or at least
posts below it, formerly. On the north side of West
Street at the corner of Wool Lane is the Bricklayers'
Arms Inn, a much-altered timber-framed house of the
17th century. The south front is of plaster and tilehanging and the west side of brick, but timber-framing
shows inside and it has an old fire-place and square
chimney-stack with square pilasters. The cottage next
north may have been part of it formerly and continues
the same roof lines. It is brick-faced, but shows 17th-century framing at the north end.
Farther north on the east side of Wool Lane are two
reconditioned cottages with jettied upper stories, one
mostly plastered and the other showing some 16th- or
17th-century framing. Another, next north in Rumbold's Hill, has a jettied upper story with tile-hanging.
The Wheatsheaf Inn at the point of junction between
Rumbold's Hill and Wool Lane has also been much
altered, but shows 17th-century framing in the jettied
upper story of its east side.
Another repaired cottage on the west side of the
Mint has some 16th-century framing in the upper
story—curved braces below the wall-plate and curved
struts against the main posts. The lower story is of
stone.
North Street has few old buildings. One next north
of the Angel Hotel, on the east side, has been a shop
and storehouse. The south side of it has five bays of
16th-century timber-framing with close-set studding
with curved struts to the story-posts. The 18th-or 19th-century street front is plastered. A shop and bank
premises next south is modernized but has a date 1677
and shows old timber-framing and a moulded ceilingbeam inside. Farther north a stone-built cottage with
brick dressings and a central chimney-stack with pilasters is of the late 17th century, and a small house opposite has old timber-framing in the jettied half-gabled
south end.
Midhurst was a 'free borough' and in 1278 was said
to have been so from time beyond memory. (fn. 9) It was
governed by a bailiff, (fn. 10) who was elected by the burgesses
from among themselves and presented to the lord's
steward at the annual court baron of the manor of
Midhurst. (fn. 11) With him were associated a number of
burgesses, but the constitution, and even the numbers,
of this council cannot be traced. Dallaway's statement
that (in 1815) 'they have a common seal' (fn. 12) is at least
doubtful, the only item of municipal insignia remaining in the hands of the Town Trust being a silvergilt mace, presented in 1736 by Sir Henry Peachey.
Disputes over the rights of the burgesses were settled in
1409 by an agreement under which Sir John de Bohun
(and his feoffees) conveyed to Michael Bageley and six
other named burgesses and their successors the right to
take the market tolls and to hold both the three-weekly
courts and the two 'law days' by their steward in the name
of Sir John and his heirs, by payment of 40s. yearly. If
they failed for a whole year to hold the courts the
agreement should lapse, and if they neglected to keep
the streets and ditches in order the lord's manorial
officers should take measures against offenders but should
hand over any fines to the burgesses. (fn. 13) This arrangement was confirmed in 1537 by Sir William Fitzwilliam. (fn. 14)
The bailiff held the assize of bread and ale, appointing two ale-tasters yearly, and acted as clerk of the
market. (fn. 15) A market existed from an early date, for in
1223 when the Bishop of London complained that
Savaric de Bohun had taken tolls in the market of Midhurst from his men of Lodsworth who were exempt
from such tolls under a charter of King John, Savaric
replied that his ancestors had been seised of the tolls
before the date of the charter. (fn. 16) There was a weekly
market on Tuesday in 1288, (fn. 17) but under a grant made
to Viscount Montague in 1681 the market was to be
held on alternate Tuesdays. (fn. 18) By 1792 the weekly
market day was Thursday, (fn. 19) and there was still a
market for corn on that day in 1878, (fn. 20) but by 1888 it
was apparently no longer functioning. (fn. 21) The grant of
1681 included fairs on Lady Day (25 March), St.
Margaret's (20 July), and St. Luke's (18 October).
The first and third continued (allowing for the change
in the calendar in 1752) until 1888, but the July fair
is replaced in 1792 by Whit Tuesday and in 1888 by
19 May.
In 1284 the issues of the vill included fixed rents
of burgesses called 'potteresgavel' amounting to 36s. 8d.
—a large sum, considering that the other burgage rents
came to only 34s. (fn. 22) The deduction that there was any
large established industry of pot-making is not supported by any other evidence. The subsidy roll for
1340, (fn. 23) possibly incomplete, gives only 15 names, including a dyer, a butcher, and 2 tanners; and that for
1523, (fn. 24) with 100 names, identifies 2 shoemakers and 2
butchers; a tanyard is mentioned in 1718; (fn. 25) in 1878
there were 3 saddlers and 5 shoemakers. (fn. 26) The industries, in fact, were those likely to be associated with an
agricultural community.
In the 12th century Enjuger and Savaric de Bohun
granted a rent of 1 mark from a mill at Midhurst to the
abbey of Waverley; (fn. 27) and this was transferred by the
monks to Anthony de Beck, Bishop of Durham, in
1289. (fn. 28) When Sir John de Bohun died in 1284 he
owned the North Mill (near the bridge over the Rother),
worth 40s., and the South Mill (of which the pond lies
below the Castle Hill), worth 6s. 8d. (fn. 29) In 1311 the
value of the two mills had risen to £8. (fn. 30) A contract was
made in 1467 by Sir Humphrey Bohun with Nicholas
Wykford for rebuilding the North Mill as a corn and
malt mill. (fn. 31) The tithes of both mills had evidently been
granted to the Knights Hospitallers, as they were included in the lease of the chapel in 1515 to Robert
Gybrisshe made by Sir Thomas Docwra, Prior of the
Order. (fn. 32)
Midhurst as a borough sent two members (fn. 33) to the
parliament of 1301, but was not again represented until
1311. From that date onwards the borough was represented intermittently—for instance, no names of its
members are recorded between 1344 and 1350—until
1382, from which time it figures in the returns continuously until 1832. Under the Reform Act the
borough lost one member and its boundaries were much
extended, covering most of the neighbouring parishes.
For fifty years Midhurst continued to send one member, but by the Municipal Corporations Act of 1883 it
lost this right and the status of a borough. During the
medieval period the members elected were local men,
but under the Tudors and Stuarts they tended more and
more to be chosen from the landed gentry, such names
as Lewkenor, Morley, and Alcock constantly appearing.
Early in the 18th century the lordship of the borough
(separate from the manor) was bought from Viscount
Montague by John Meeres Fagge for his son-in-law Sir
John Peachey. This gave control over the electors, who
were the tenants of ancient burgages—some of which
had long ceased to exist, having been absorbed into
Cowdray Park, in the walls of which inscribed stones
indicated their former sites and entitled their nominal
owners to vote. Members of the Peachey family held
one seat from 1722 to 1760. The seventh Viscount
Montague bought back the borough, but on his death
his trustees sold it to the Earl of Egremont for £40,000.
About 1800 the earl sold it to Lord Carrington and his
brothers John and George Smith. From 1819 to 1831
both seats were held by members of the Smith family,
who retained the nominal lordship of the borough until
the present century, when Mr. Gerald Dudley Smith
sold it to the 1st Viscount Cowdray. (fn. 34) Among the
later members for the borough the most famous was the
young Charles James Fox, whose first constituency this
was in 1768, the other seat being then held by his
cousin Henry Fox. A little earlier, in 1761, the two
seats had been held by John Burgoyne, the dramatist
and general, and Sir William Hamilton, art collector,
diplomatist, and husband of Nelson's Emma. After
1832 the single seat was held from 1846 to 1856 by
Spencer Walpole, Home Secretary in 1852.
Owing to the influence of the Lords Montague at
Cowdray Midhurst was a centre of Roman Catholicism.
Thus in 1621 there were about forty households of
recusants here. (fn. 35) In 1634 John Arismandy appointed
John Cope and Richard Shelley to administer certain
moneys after his death to provide a priest for the poor
Catholics of Midhurst, to say masses every week for his
soul and 'my lords auncestors'. This deed was found in
the 19th century in a box hidden in the chimney of an
old house with rosaries and other religious objects. (fn. 36) In
1642 the 'Protestation' in support of the Church of
England was signed by 207 men in Midhurst, but 54
'recusant Papists' refused at first to sign it. Two days
later 35 of these did sign, (fn. 37) probably excepting, either
expressly or mentally, the special clause denouncing the
Roman Faith, as did their colleagues at Easebourne, (fn. 38)
where there was an equal number of recusants. The
present Roman Catholic church, built in sandstone in
the Early English style, was erected in 1869 within
the liberty of St. John. (fn. 39)
Some ultra-Protestant reaction may be traced in the
large number of dissenters found here. In 1676 the
estimated numbers of Conformists were 341, of Papists
56, and of Nonconformists 50. (fn. 40) In 1672 a licence had
been issued for Richard Garrett to hold a Congregational meeting in the house of Nicholas Brewer,
clothier. (fn. 41) Garrett, a graduate of Oxford, had been
rector of Stedham. (fn. 42) At the present time there are
Congregational and Methodist chapels.
MANORS
It has already been suggested that Easebourne, of which Midhurst was originally
part, may have been a demesne manor of
Earl Roger accidentally omitted in the Domesday Survey. (fn. 43) At the beginning of the 12th century MIDHURST was given by Henry I, to whom the honor
of Arundel had escheated, to Savaric fitz Cane, to hold
with its appurtenances as 3 knights' fees. (fn. 44) He married
Muriel, apparently daughter of Richard de Meri who
had married Lucy eventual heiress of the seigneurie of
Bohun. Savaric left three sons: Ralph died without
surviving issue in 1159; his brothers Savaric and
Geldewin in 1158 made an agreement by which Midhurst passed to the latter. On the death of Savaric fitz
Savaric early in, or shortly before, 1187 Geldewin inherited the whole of his father's lands and also those of
his mother's brother Enjuger de Bohun, who had died
in 1180. Geldewin died about the end of 1187 and
was succeeded by his eldest son Frank de Bohun, who
incurred the enmity of Henry II, probably through his
support of the king's son Richard, as the latter in 1190
annulled an agreement which King Henry had forced
Frank to make with Ralph de Arderne and confirmed
him in possession of his estates, including Midhurst. (fn. 45)
Frank died in 1192 and his widow Rohese paid 300
marks to have the custody of his lands and of his sons. (fn. 46)
The elder of these, Enjuger, was marshal for Normandy in 1213 and died at the end of 1218, when he
was planning a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. (fn. 47) His brother
and heir Savaric died in 1246, about which time his son
Sir Frank married Sibyl daughter of William de
Ferrers, Earl of Derby; (fn. 48) he married secondly Nichole
widow of Bartholomew de la Chapelle, to whom the
manor of Midhurst was allotted after his death in 1273.
Sir John, his eldest son by his first wife, married Joan,
his step-sister, daughter of Bartholomew and Nichole,
and died in 1284, leaving three sons, of whom the
eldest was only 9. Shortly before his death Sir John
had granted Midhurst to Anthony Beck, Bishop of
Durham, for life, with remainder to his own children.
The bishop survived until 1311, by which time Sir
John's eldest son John had died (c. 1296), as had the
second son James (fn. 49) (1306). The latter's son John, born
at Todham, was still a child when the bishop died,
and custody of 2/3 of the manor of Midhurst (the other
⅓ being held by Sir John's widow) was granted to Sir
Henry Percy. (fn. 50) John died in 1367, leaving a son John,
born at Cowdray in 1363, who lived till 1433. His son
Sir Humphrey died in 1460, and his son John Bohun,
who died in 1492, was the last male of his line. He left
two daughters, of whom the younger, Ursula, married
Sir Robert Southwell and died without issue, so that
Midhurst and the other Bohun estates passed to Mary
and her husband Sir David Owen, a bastard son of
Owen Tudor, the grandfather of Henry VII.

Bohun. Or a cross azure.

Browne, Viscount Montague, sable three lions passant bendwise between two double cotises argent.
As early as 1384 dower was assigned to Cecily widow
of Sir John de Bohun in 'the manor of Midhurst
called Coderay'. (fn. 51) From the time when Sir David
Owen began the building of the great house the manor,
as distinct from the borough, of Midhurst was often
called COWDRAY. In 1528 Sir David sold the
Bohun estates to Sir William Fitzwilliam, reserving the
right to live at Cowdray, but permitting Sir William
to build there, provided he was not inconvenienced by
the work. (fn. 52) His son Sir Henry Owen pointed out that
Sir David had only a life interest, but himself conveyed
the reversion to Sir William. (fn. 53) The latter, created
Earl of Southampton in 1537, died in 1542 and left
the estates to his half-brother Sir Anthony Browne. He
died in 1548 and was succeeded by his eldest son, Sir
Anthony, who was created Viscount Montague in 1554
and lived until 1592. His eldest son having died shortly
before him, Midhurst and Cowdray passed to his
grandson Anthony Maria and from him in unbroken
succession to George Samuel, 8th Viscount Montague,
who was drowned in 1793 when rashly attempting to
shoot the rapids of the Rhine. As he left no issue the
estates passed to his sister Elizabeth Mary, who married
William Stephen Poyntz. He died in 1840, leaving
three daughters, by whom the property was sold to the
6th Earl of Egmont. From the 8th Earl it was bought
in 1908 by Sir Weetman Pearson, created Baron
Cowdray in 1910 and Viscount in 1917, and is now
held by the 3rd Viscount.
Tenements in Midhurst and land in neighbouring
parishes were granted to the Knights Hospitallers,
presumably by one of the Bohuns. (fn. 54) Accordingly, in
1278 the prior of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem
successfully claimed for his tenants here a long list of
liberties and exemptions, except that it was found that
they were at scot and lot with the other men of the
town in matters pertaining to the Crown. (fn. 55) In 1338
the Hospitallers had a grange in
Midhurst with 50 acres of arable
and a rood of meadow, let for
13s. 4d., and pasturage for 100
sheep, worth 8s. 4d. (fn. 56) The
estates were under the Commandery of Poling and constituted the LIBERTY OF ST.
JOHN. A chapel was built,
and this with its estates was
leased in 1515 for forty-one years
to Robert Gybrisshe at a rent of
33s. 4d., he doing all repairs and
finding a priest to celebrate four
times in the year. (fn. 57) He was also
responsible for the ornaments, which included a silvergilt chalice and paten, and vestments. Before the lease
expired the Hospital had been suppressed, and in June
1561 the manor and chapel, with tenements in West
and North Streets, &c., were granted to the Earl of
Southampton. (fn. 58) The manor of St. John's then descended with the manor of Midhurst, each being valued
at £20 in 1629. (fn. 59)

Pearson, Lord Cowdray. Per fesse indented gules and or in chief two suns in splendour and in base a demi-gryphon counterchanged.
CHURCH
The church of ST. MARY MAGDALENE
(fn. 60) stands on the east side of Church
Hill, and is built of rubble with ashlar
dressings, some chequer of flint and ashlar appearing
on the west front, and is roofed with tile. Restoration
and rebuilding have obscured its history; it now consists of chancel and nave, both flanked by aisles, tower
between the two south aisles, and west vestibule. The
chancel appears to have been enlarged in the 15th or
16th century, the ground stage of the tower is of the
early 13th, its upper stages and the aisles east and west
of it the 16th, the vestibule is modern, as is, apparently, the whole of the north aisle.
The chancel measures 29 by 23 ft. internally, and
has an east window of five lights, originally of the 15th
century but much restored; on each side an arcade of
two pointed arches resting on octagonal piers and
responds is wholly modern; there is no chancel arch.
Its south aisle, formerly the Montague chapel (33 by
18 ft.) has a three-light window in the east wall and
three two-light windows and a doorway with plain
pointed head and jambs in the south; this work is
originally 16th-century, but has been extensively
restored. The north aisle, which serves as vestry and
organ chamber, is wholly modern.
In the east wall of the tower is a pointed arch of two
orders, modern; in the north wall is a pointed arch of
one order resting on imposts on square jambs, perhaps 13th-century; in the west wall is a pointed arch
of three orders resting on semi-octagonal responds with
moulded capitals and bases, of the 16th century.
Against the south wall is a buttress of two stages with
sloping offsets; east of this is a plain pointed doorway,
modern; higher up are two small lancet windows with
concentric splays, early-13th-century. On each face of
the upper stage is a small two-light window, perhaps
16th-century. A modern shingled cap to the tower has
large dormer windows.
The nave, exclusive of the gallery over the vestibule,
measures 45 by 23 ft. Its south arcade west of the
tower consists of two pointed arches of two orders resting on octagonal piers and responds with moulded caps
and bases; the north arcade is of like design but of
three bays; this is modern in a rather nondescript Gothic
style. Over the vestibule is a gallery lit by a modern
window with Perpendicular tracery.
In the south wall of the south aisle is the doorway
to the newel stair to the tower, a moulded four-centred
arch on moulded jambs; west of this are two windows,
each of three uncusped lights without tracery under a
square head; in the west wall is a doorway with moulded
four-centred arch on moulded jambs; this work is of the
16th century. The north aisle has a single modern
two-light window in the west wall. The vestibule,
equally modern, has entrance doors in its north, west,
and south sides.
The font, under the north arch of the tower, is
octagonal on an octagonal stem; both have sunk panels
with uncusped pointed heads, perhaps 13th-century;
a wooden cover is of the 17th. The pulpit is of wood,
octagonal, with pierced panels of good tracery verging
on the Flamboyant, 16th-century. In the chancel is a
wooden chest of normal 13th-century form with four
chip-carved roundels on its front, about 5 ft. 6 in. long
and about 1 ft. by 1 ft. cross-section; the lid, of a
single piece of wood, preserves its pin hinges. Two
joint-stools, serving as coffin trestles, are inscribed
16 I/T B/P 89. On the north wall of the tower are the
royal arms as borne 1702–7.
There are six bells, all cast by Lester & Pack in
1765. (fn. 61)
The church plate includes a silver flagon of 1736,
given by Richard Young, and an alms plate of 1804;
also a chalice and paten of 1834. (fn. 62)
The parish registers begin in 1565.
ADVOWSON
Although Midhurst gave its name
to a rural deanery, the church remained a chapel of Easebourne (q.v.),
whose chaplain was appointed by the prioress. At the
Dissolution it passed into the gift of the owners of the
Cowdray estate as a perpetual curacy. In 1557 Sir
Anthony Browne, as owner of a number of rectories
and advowsons, proposed to endow or augment
vicarages in all of them, including Midhurst, with the
tithes of the rectories, reserving the advowsons. (fn. 63) He
also proposed to found two chantries, one at Battle and
the other at the altar of St. John the Evangelist in the
parish church of Midhurst. The royal licence was duly
given on 12 June, but if any steps were taken to carry
out the proposals they came to nothing on the death
of Queen Mary a little more than a year later. Nearly
200 years later, in 1747, Everard Levitt left £100 for
the purchase of lands to augment the living, so that the
incumbent should have prayers on Wednesday and
Friday. (fn. 64)
Sir David Owen in his will, made in 1530, desired a
chantry of two priests to be founded in the church, the
priests to be appointed by the Dean of Chichester, the
Prioress of Easebourne, and the 'vicar' of Midhurst; (fn. 65)
but there is no evidence that this was done.
Michael Bageley, (fn. 66) who represented the borough in
Parliament in 1399, in 1422 founded a Brotherhood
which supported a morrow-mass priest in Midhurst
church. (fn. 67) It held lands yielding £14 10s. 6d. in 1523, (fn. 68)
bequests being made to the Brotherhood of the Holy
Rood before and after that date. (fn. 69) Two wardens collected the money and accounted for it to the town
bailiff; when the seizure of lands given for 'superstitious' purposes was imminent, the 'maisters of the
town' caused the lands to be conveyed to them by a
new deed and so managed to retain them. (fn. 70)
In 1291 the chapel of St. Denis within the former
castle of Midhurst was mentioned, and also the 'chantries of Midhurst in the chapel of St. Thomas'. (fn. 71) The
latter was probably the chapel of the Hospitallers, as of
the four services which the priest was to celebrate in
1515 two were the feast of St. Thomas (29 December)
and his translation (7 July), and the ornaments of the
chapel included an alabaster tablet of St. Thomas of
Canterbury. (fn. 72)
CHARITIES
George Ognell's poor charity was
established in 1596 by the said George
Ognell, of Crullfield (Warws.), who enfeoffed 12 trustees in tenements, amounting to some
160 acres, in the neighbourhood of Midhurst for the
benefit of the poor of that town. It is regulated by a
scheme of the Charity Commissioners dated 20 February
1880, which appoints a body of trustees to administer
the charity and apply the income under various heads
for the benefit of deserving and necessitous persons
resident in the parish. The annual income amounts to
£138 10s. 0d.
John Robinson by his will proved on 2 April 1895
gave to the trustees of Ognell's charity £500 to invest.
By a scheme of the Charity Commissioners dated
3 November 1899 it was provided that the income shall
be applied by the trustees in the payment of a pension
to a poor person who has resided in the parish for not
less than five years next preceding the time of his or
her appointment. The annual income amounts to
£11 14s. 0d.
Henry Crete.
It is recorded upon the table of benefactions in the church that Henry Crete, by his will, left
10s. a year for 30 poor people of this parish. The
charity is now regulated by a scheme of the Charity
Commissioners dated 19 April 1929 which provides
that the charity shall be administered by the trustees of
Ognell's Charity.
Midhurst Town Trust. By a scheme of the Charity
Commissioners dated 4 February 1910 it was provided
that the properties consisting of the Town Hall, the
Market Place, the Pound, and the Parish Stocks, all at
Midhurst, shall be administered and managed by a
body of trustees therein constituted, and that any residue of income of the trust, after payment of the expenses of management, repairs, and insurance, and all
other charges payable in respect of the properties shall
be applied by the trustees for some public purpose or
purposes in Midhurst to be approved by the Commissioners.
The charity of Henry Court, founded by deed dated
8 May 1869, is regulated by a scheme of the Charity
Commissioners dated 5 September 1893 as varied by
schemes of the said Commissioners dated 2 August 1898
and 4 July 1924. By the scheme of 1893 the Governors
for the time being of the Midhurst Grammar School
were appointed to be trustees of the charity and it provided that the income shall be applied in apprenticing
poor boys, natives of Midhurst, who have always resided there, and who have completed their 13th but not
their 15th year, as indoor apprentices. By the scheme of
1898, if proper applicants for indoor apprenticeships
are not forthcoming the trustees may apply such income in apprenticing duly qualified poor boys as
outdoor apprentices. The annual income of the charity
amounts to £27 10s. 2d.
The Revd. Frank Tatchell by his will dated 20 August
1932 devised his freehold cottage at Midhurst known
as Mint Cottage to the vicar and churchwardens to be
used as a residence of the curate, verger, or other church
official for the time being as the vicar may decide.
The testator, by the second codicil to his will, also
devised his cottage known as No. 6 Little Ashfield to
the Governing Body of the Midhurst Nursing Association to be used as a hostel or residence for the Association's nurses. The property was sold in 1938. The
endowment of the charity now consists of a sum of £450
3 per cent. Defence Bonds. By an Order dated 1 June
1943 the Charity Commissioners established a scheme
for the regulation of the charity, under which there
shall be four managing trustees and the yearly income
shall be applied towards the salaries of the nurses of the
Midhurst, Easebourne, and West Lavington Nursing
Association.
The Pest House charity, founded by Viscount
Montague by indenture dated 5 August 1741 is now
regulated by schemes of the Charity Commissioners
dated 31 January 1899 and 27 February 1911. The
scheme of 1899 appointed a body of trustees to administer the charity and directed that the yearly income
shall be applied in one or more of the following ways:
1. In contributing towards the maintenance of any
Isolation Hospital or Ward which may be established for the parish of Midhurst or otherwise
towards the isolation of cases of infectious disease.
2. In contributing towards the maintenance of any
Cottage Hospital established for any area comprising the parish of Midhurst, upon such terms,
as far as may be, as to enable the trustees to secure
the benefits of the hospital for poor patients of the
parish.
3. In providing a parish nurse, special nourishment,
surgical appliances, assistance in entering convalescent homes, or otherwise for the benefit of
the sick poor of the parish.
The annual income amounts to £103 approximately.
The Curfew Charity. It appears from a Report
dated 1 June 1860 to the Charity Commissioners that a
person (name unknown) having in the olden time lost
his way and gained the town of Midhurst by hearing
the curfew bell, in gratitude gave a quarter of an acre of
land situate in Knockhundred Row, Midhurst, towards
the tolling a curfew bell in the parish church, which has
since been done at 8 p.m., except during the war.
The Midhurst Curfew Garden Preservation Fund.
By a Declaration of Trust dated 18 February 1925
Amy Brooks declared that, being desirous that the
Curfew Garden shall not be sold or built upon but
shall be held for all time for the purpose of maintaining
the ancient custom of ringing the curfew in Midhurst,
settled a sum of £180 2½ per cent. Consolidated Stock
upon trust, the income (so long as the garden remains
unsold and unbuilt upon) to be received by the vicar
and churchwardens of Midhurst and applied at their
discretion in the following objects or any of them
1. The payment of the ringer of the curfew.
2. The maintenance fencing and other expenses of
or concerning the Curfew Garden.
3. The repair of the tower and belfry and of the
bell ringing the curfew.
The Declaration of Trust provided that on the sale
of the Curfew Garden or in case the same shall be
built upon the trust fund shall be held in trust for the
National Trust for places of Historical Interest or
Natural Beauty.
The annual income amounts to £4 10s.